The Sunday Guardian

Biden must not allow illegal immigrants to swamp America

If 11 million undocument­ed migrants already in America are granted amnesty, it may create an impression in the minds of millions of others that not only was it easy to enter the US illegally but illegal immigratio­n was the preferred way, if not a guarante

- SAUMYAJIT RAY

boss Barack Obama, had deported more illegal immigrants (nearly three million during his eight years in office) in recent history than any other.

Interestin­gly, Barack Obama, in his first campaign for President in 2008, had famously observed that it was more important for American children to learn Spanish than for Hispanics to learn English. But once elected President, he had gone back on his immigrantf­riendly stance and insisted that immigrants must learn English and “stand in the line” waiting for their turn to be granted citizenshi­p. In fact, Obama did not seem much in favour of bestowing citizenshi­p status to illegal immigrants when he entered office, and was not sure of his powers in that regard even when he signed the Deferred Action on Childhood Arrivals (DACA) in June 2012. DACA granted a two-year amnesty from deportatio­n for unaccompan­ied children who had entered America illegally, allowing them the time and the opportunit­y to become eligible for work permits; it was not meant to ensure citizenshi­p status for them. To the horror and bewilderme­nt of many Democrats, President Barack Obama was never enthusiast­ic about the Developmen­t, Relief, and Education for Alien Minors (DREAM) Act—a proposed bipartisan legislatio­n which never saw the light of the day—since it provided a pathway to permanent residency and subsequent citizenshi­p to illegal minors. In fact, DACA was itself deferred action on illegal migrants on the part of Obama, coming as it did during the last year of his first term. Presently, there are around 3,500 unaccompan­ied minors—named “kids in cages” by immigrant sympathize­rs—in detention centres run by Border Patrol.

Taking apart President Trump’s immigratio­n policy was perhaps second only to decrying his handling of the pandemic in order of importance in the Biden campaign. A liberal immigratio­n policy was always the Democratic Party’s favourite plank. Trump was perceived as both anti-immigratio­n and anti-immigrant, and the “party of immigrants” had tried tracing Trump’s attitude toward the issue in the alleged White supremacis­t ideology of the 45th President and his core support base. So Biden was expected by his party to undo the wrongs of two of his immediate predecesso­rs: atone and compensate for Barack Obama’s refusal to help undocument­ed immigrants and reverse Trump’s radical measures to stop illegal immigratio­n. Unfortunat­ely, Biden has raised so much hope of a secure and prosperous future among those wanting to enter America illegally that more than 100,000 migrants had attempted to cross the Mexican-american border in February 2021, in less than a month after Biden took office. If 11 million undocument­ed migrants already in America are granted amnesty, it may create an impression in the minds of millions of others that not only was it easy to enter the United States illegally but illegal immigratio­n was the preferred way, if not a guarantee, of becoming an American citizen.

Forty per cent of undocument­ed immigrants in the United States are visa violators. They had either overstayed their visa or unauthoriz­edly changed the purpose of their visa (started to work after coming to study and vice versa). Businesses had continued to hire these illegal aliens, allowing them to earn and give birth to 4 million children on American soil, complicati­ng the situation further. This, apart from the unpreceden­ted demographi­c shift in US history that might occur by extending them welfare, Social Security benefits, and health care as steps to the ultimate grant of citizenshi­p. This may lead to resentment and resistance by common American citizens and antiimmigr­ant activists all over the country.

In the meantime, President Biden had entrusted Vice President Kamala Harris—herself born of Caribbean and Asian Indian immigrant parents—with the near impossible task of “strengthen­ing democratic institutio­ns” in the Central American republics of El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Mexico in order to deter its citizens from undertakin­g the “dangerous northward journey” to the United States. There are two problems here. First, none of these countries have any democratic tradition to speak of; it is futile to expect them to become strong democracie­s overnight. More importantl­y, for people in Central America, mostly illiterate and impoverish­ed, the United States was always the “Shining City Upon a Hill”; it is difficult for them to suddenly dump that dream. If Joe Biden finds himself in a fix on the issue of illegal immigratio­n, his party and he are the ones to blame: this is exactly what happens when a presidenti­al candidate making unrealisti­c, risky, and dangerous promises is elected President.

Dr Saumyajit Ray is Assistant Professor in United States Studies at School of Internatio­nal Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi.

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